Note: You need to enable scripting and Javascript in your browser settings to best view and navigate our website. Otherwise, use our keyboard navigation and search page. For keyboard tabbing on this page you can bypass the top menu bar navigation and jump to the page sidebar navigation (if applicable), or jump to the page body. Our print link for screen media is scripted. Your computer's normal print command will print this page. Please contact us if you have difficulty in accessing our web pages.

Dispatches from the field

Alaska Native women in Bristol Bay salmon fisheries

Hi from Bristol Bay!

June 30, 2017 -- During our first week and half in the field, we had some incredible experiences. We conducted our first interviews; tried subsistence-harvested foods, including berries and sockeye salmon; and watched fishermen set their lines in anticipation of the king salmon arriving. We also had a fourth member join our team. Kitty Sopow hails from Sitka, Alaska, and is interning with the Bristol Bay Native Association (BBNA) for the summer. She has a dog named Fawn and shared some of her own subsistence practices with us. She fishes for salmon, hunts deer, and harvests mushrooms, berries, and medicinal herbs like Devil’s Club. Kitty assisted us with interviews and served as our community liaison.

Conducting the interviews

We started in Dillingham, Bristol Bay’s central hub, where we had the privilege of working with the staff of the BBNA, who all were incredibly helpful and welcoming. We attended BBNA’s annual picnic, and their staff put us in touch with key individuals for interviews.

We were fortunate to observe and document subsistence set net fishing around town along the Nushagak as king salmon started coming in. Set net fishing is typically done from land with one end of the line anchored on shore and the other end in water. Subsistence set netters in this area typically use 10-fathom gillnets. The net is attached to a lead line and a cork line and is set at low tide. As the tide comes in the cork line lifts the net in the water. Passing salmon are caught in the net and are revealed again when the tide goes out. Set netters diligently watch the tides to determine when they need to check their nets; sometimes this means going out at 3:00 am in the morning! Arriving too late exposes the salmon to seagulls, which will eat the eyes and egg sacs of the salmon.

Misty Nielsen catches a king salmon in a subsistence set net. Photo: A. Santos, NOAA Fisheries

We conducted five oral histories during our first week in Dillingham, focusing on Alaska Native women who fish in Bristol Bay. Oral histories are in-depth interviews that document personal narrative and life experience. We heard some incredible stories from women who have been fishing for 20+ years in commercial and/or subsistence fisheries in Bristol Bay. Fishing is an integral part of their way of life. Recurring themes in our interviews include the connection that fishing provides to the land and water and the way that fishing cements family and community bonds.

We’re also learning that these are extremely tough women! Set net fishing is very physically demanding – imagine catching around 200 fish at once and having to haul them in all by hand. In addition, there is typically 3-4 hours of processing to be done immediately after catching fish, including filleting, stripping, and vacuum packing or smoking the fish. Some residents have their own smokehouses -- small, enclosed buildings that are designed to dry and smoke salmon. Smoking takes about 2 weeks to complete.

Drying fish hang in a smokehouse. Salmon is cut into strips (left) or is hung as split fillets (right). Slices are made in the fillets to allow for increased air circulation. Photo: K. Sparks, NOAA Fisheries

In our next installment we will share a bit more about the second half of our trip, what we’re learning through these oral histories and what we’re planning to do with this research. Special thanks to NOAA Preserve America and the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission for providing funds and support for this study, and to the Bristol Bay Native Association for partnering with us on this project.